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298 ARIS TOTLE 's P o L I m x . music =(the keynote,' 'that what n e have to say may be a sort of keynote to any future discussion of the subject.' Cp. Arist. Rhet. iii. 14. $ I , 14x4 b. 2 2 , Kai yhp oi a;k?mi, 8 rl hv f 8 Fxouiv a&jvnl rolro npoauX$uaams OuvjJlav T$ &&7uLpy, m i h rois &ri&rmixois XdyorE Bci O ~ T [email protected]. 2-4. Aristotle suggests three reasons which might be given for the cultivation of music : I ) ?rar8& Kai ( i v a r n k o s &wa, like Sleep, wine, dancing (cp. Kit, Eth. x. 6. 9 6), amusement and relaxation being the means to renewed exertion. 2) Because of its influence on character. Hence its value in education (rnisda). 3) ~ p Sbm p~y $ v mi +po'vqurv, as an end. I n c. 7. $ 3 he speaks of music as being used for a ) TiniScin, 6) Kdenpurr, c) Gluywy<; u ) corresponds to 2 ) of c. 5 (+E T+ narhcinv), C) to 3). This leaves 6) Ici8npuis to correspond to the use of music as n relaxation, and would seem to show that Aristotle gave the loncr meaning to KdfhpUiS (i. e. ' purgation ' rather than purification '). 8 9Cp. c. 3. 4 , $appnKdas X i p r u , and C. 7. 4, Cump iarpdas r q d v m s Kai Kaedporos. See note on c. 7. $ 3. 6. 2. rrai bpa n o h p'pipvav, 8s rptjuiv ECptaiSrp Goettling and Bekker (in his second edition), against the au- thority of the XISS. of the Politics, have altered dpn r a & ink ;van&, an unnecessary change, and unsupported by the JISS. oi Euripides, which cannot be quoted on either side ; for the citation. like many others in Aristotle, is inaccurate. The words referred to occur in Eur. Bacch. $30 :- S E [Rpdpros] rdd' ;xa, B~a&FLv T I XopoiE prra r' nCXoC yshaoar, dnonaloal rf ppipras. 6. 3. rdrrowtv ah+. Sc. cis ?raiSiAu ra'l dvdmuatv understood from the words preceding. 6.3. Reading &rvy for oLy, gathered from &VOU i a i $eqs supra, Kith

I'I'OTES, BOOK L'ZZl. j. 299Bekker's 2nd edition, but against the authority of all the hISS. andof William de Moerbek. dkkh pdv otSc' Sinywyjv TE matuis c i p p h f l aai soir $ b K h S & 0 8 ~ 8 d ) , n5~. 4.raig roia&ais. T h e particle re is not easily explained. It may be suggestedeither that I ) it should be omitted, or 2) should be changed intoTL or rok, or 3 ) that ~ n ' r$ppO'vqur~ should be addcd after it from44the corresponding words in 4 , rppbc Smywylji TL uvp~jdkksraiaai +po'yurv.0 6 6 f d $ p bT&; ?TPOU$KfL '&OS. 6. 4,A singular and almost verbal fancy. ' The imperfect is opposedto the perfect, and therefore the immature youth is not intendedfor reason and contemplation.' Yet the meaning of rlhos is$5obscure, cp. infra 1 2 , 13, i'm? ti ;V pr'v r+ TCAEL uup$aivfi TU^dv6pQr;ors d h i y d ~ ~YsIyuEu6m. 5-8 are a series of dsopiac which take the form of a sup- 6. 5-8.pressed dialogue. I ) But a child may learn music with a view toa time when he will be grown u p ; 2 ) But why should he learnhimself? 3) He i d 1 not appreciate unless he does; 4 ) Thenwhy should he not learn cookery? 5 ) And how wi!l his morals beimproved by playing himself rather than by hearing othersperform? Yet infra c. 6 these cobwebs are dashed aside; and itis acknowledged that the truer and deeper effect of music canonly be produced on the mind by actual practice. Gump oi AdKwvfs' iKsivob yhp 06 pvedvovrrs ;pwc Biwavsai Kpiucru 5 . 7.dp&, 1s $ a d , r h xprjcrsir aai rh PI) xpqurh r i v pchSu. Cp. what Plato says of the 'timocratic man,' in Rep. viii.548 E, aC8a8lmcpdu TE SF; airrdv, i v ti ZyB, &ai Kai droapouudrrpou,6'~ ~ 6 p O U U O82V K d @h$KOOV p6IIv,~ ~ 7 0 p l K d V O c 8 i l p ~ S . 06 yAp 6 Z& acrds q6el Kai d3api[fl rois aoiqraG, dXhh xai @ava;uour 6. 8.K a h O G p f V s o h TO1O;TOUF. I n 11. i. 603 it is Apollo, not Zeus, who plays to the assembly ofthe gods.;,ye ytip 5uar ;Sov{v rim *ai rb relor, dM' oh r$v w x o h a v ' {qroiimcs 6 . 13.

300 A RlSTO TLE 'S P O LI TICS. 8; rairqv, Xappdvovuru bs r a h q v l u t i q v , 6ch rA T+ d h e t r i v npLiscou ;X<LP 6 p i o p d r1. There is a finality about pleasure, which leads to a confusion with happiness. Like the greater end of life it comes after toll ; it is sensible to the eye or feeling; it is the anticipation of itt know not what: no account can be given of it. r a ~ h l v ,sc. 06 T i v rwXoCrrav, ' the higher pleasure ;' C u ~ i q v , the lower plensure.'6,1 4 . 6r' $P pZv ov'v airlav K.T.X. Cp. Nic. Eth. vii. 13. $ 6 , A X ' inri OGX 6 a h $ o h @&LE 0% 4C ~ L S dpiurq oih' iurru o h aorsi, o b 8 j S o v $ v BcLiKouur T+J aLrjv ndvrts, jSowjv +JJ J ~ ~ O~ dL v r f s . u I u ~ s6 i Kai 8 i d ~ ~ o ~ofu,?(. 1 ~ o?ovTal 06s' $v bv @ a b , dkkh riv aGsjv. s 6 v r a ybp $Suer +EL TL BEioV. dXX' ciX++aur T+J TOG bvbparos dqpovop$v ai uoparrKni $oval 6ch rb x)\frwdKls rc napaDdXXfrv cis o f r h o rai rrdvrns perlxciv o t r i u . 6rh ri, p h a s odv yvopipovs f l a r s o h a s p h a s oiovrar cLac.5 . I 4. of 6rh r a i q v piivqv, sc. ~qr0Curv.6.1 7 . ZTL 62 d K p O L p f V O L r ; ~p r p j a ~ o vyt'yvoviai nrivrrs u v p ~ a e & , ~ n xi opk r& c()uBp;;Y KO; s i v pcX& aGrirv. i. e. ' any imitation, whether accompanied by rhythm or song or not, creates sympathetic feeling.'6.18. soph T ~ dEh?ervhs $;ufts. ' Near to or not far removed from their true natures.'5 . 2 0 . oupSc',9qKc 82 r i v aiut+v i v piv Tois n\"XXors p+v incipxcrv rjpoiopa rois fecucv, oTov i v rois dnrois Kai rois yrumois, dXX' i v 7 6 5 hparois $pc'pa* ux<paro ydp r'urr rotaka, dXh' id P L K ~ ~ Vm, i ndvrcs r i s rorahrqs aiuBi- ufosK O W W O ~ ~ U L U . 'As to the senses [other than the sense of hearing], objects of sight alone furnish representations of ethical character ; (for figures are I) objects of sight, or 2 * ) are of an ethical character) ; but to a certain extent only, and this intellectual element (though feeble) is common to all.' The obscurity of the passage has led to the insertion of 0; before rdvrrs: but the construction is thcn abrupt and the meaning

LVOTES, BOOK rlZZ. 6. 30Ithus obtained, all do not participate in the sense of figure,' \vouIL1be a strange statement.~ T 6L' O& ?urr raL'ra dporwparn +&I <8&, dhX& q p c i a p&&v. 6 . 20.'Yet such figures and colours (which hnve been previously calledrepresentations) are not really representations but more truly signs2nd indications.'i v 6 i rois pclcuw airois. 6.2 1 .But though hardly discernible in painting we h a w the veryexpression of the feeling in music.'KCX; 70;s I;v8poLo$rlwar. 6.25.Bekker in his 2nd edition has inserted ? ; p h T ~ $W ; x ~ v beforer t a r . Cp. a reading which is confirmed by one MS. of the oldtranslator, 'cognati0 ad animanz.' Aretino's translation suggeststjpiv, but the same sense can be got out of the Greek as it stands,{piv (or ~ p b oriu J.v,y$v) being supIdied from r$v + t b r u r;w rqXtwn6qvor oi V<OL in the previous sentence.For the doctrine that the soul is a harmony, cp. Plat. Phaedo86, 92-95; Timaeus 35, 36. 6.6.~ p d ps;v rds Xprjucu $37, npdo 6; rds pa6'j.riis ihfpow. 8. 6.Though there is no variation in the NSS., or in the old trans-lator, there seems to be a corruption in this passage. Susemihltransposes xp+s and ~ C X ~ { U E L SG. oettling omits both. If retainedin their present order, they must be translated as in the text, andmay be supposed to mean that practice precedes theory. I n theRepublic practical life precedes philosophical leisure, and at theend of the Ethics (x. 9. S 20) Aristotle says that the sophist

302 ARZSTOTLE'S POLZTZCS.having n o experience of politics cannot teach them (cp. Plat.Tim. 1gD). But a fatal objection to this way of interpreting the passage isthe word p&m, which elsewhere in this chapter, and even in thenext sentence, means ' early education,' not ' mature philosophicalspeculation.'8. 7. Compare Plat. Rep. ii. 4 1 1 . I n the Laws vii. 810 he limits the time allowed for the study of music to three years.6.IO. 74 h d y y 'Speech,' as in bk. i. 42. IO.8. I I . T h e singular outburst of intellectual life at Athens, which a-e may well believe to have arisen after the Persian War, belongs to a period of Greek history known to us only from the very short summary of Athenian history contained in a few pages of Thucyddcs. It was the age of Findar and Simonides and Phrpichus and Aeschylus, of Heraclitus and Parmenides, of Protagoras and Gorgias.6.I 2 . ' E K ~ I R u T ~ ~ I ~ . =1 very ancient comic poet who flourished in the gencration before Aristophanes.6. 15, &fi 6 i r&v r € 6py<;uwv K . 1 . h . This, like many other sentences beginning with &I, is an miacoluthon, of which the real apodosis is to be found in the wortis B l h r p 06 rtju iAfve;pov KpLvoprv rr'yac r i u i p y a d a u cihhci &TI-KW7;jJav.47.I . rphov 6 c l rwh 2rcpow.Three alternatives are given : I ) Shall we use all the harmoniesand rhythms in education? 2) Shall v e make the same dis-tinctions about them in education which are made in other usesof them? Or 3) Shall we make some other distinction?~pirouRri has been suspected. rpirov is certainly not symmetricalbecause it introduces not a third case but a subdivision of thesecond case. Yet other divisions in hristotle are unsymmetrical(cp. supra c. 3. Q I and vii. 11. $5 1-1).

NOTES, B O O K VllI. 7 . 303V0,LLLKiS. 7. a.After the manner of a law,’ i. e. i v T & T ~explained by the wordswhich follow.r & p1v +%Kh rh 61 T ~ U K T L K &rL 6’ &BouuiaurLKh rtB&tS. 7. 3.These distinctions are but feebly represented by modern styles ;the first is in some degree analogous to sacred music, the secondto military music, and the third to the music of the dance.7 i p h Who ,LL;pos, 7.3.SC. rijs +vxijs or * r i v p&v. r i 62 Xi‘yoprv rfjv Kil$RpULV, Y V U piv [id&,V&Y 6’ ;U rois ~ ~ 7.p3, iBOLqTlKjS gpOfipfV UU$~UTfpOV. This promise is very imperfectly fulfilled in the short allusion to~;Bapursin Poet. c. 6. 61; r a k p2v roLal;rais dppovims Ka; ruis roLo4rois p i X f u L Bfriuv r o i s T { V 7 . 6 .6fUTpLK7jV ,LLOUULK$V / A E T U X f L p L ( O / A ~ V O U S l?YWVLUT(;S. ‘ Therefore it is for such harmonies and for such mclodics thatwe must establish the competitions of musical performers,’ i. e. wemust leave such strains of art to regular performers.nnpaKtXpoupbva. 7. 7.nnpaXpLurrs are explained to mean deviations from thc rcceivetlscale in music.’ 6 8 ;v r5 Irohrraiq Z O K ~ ~ T06~ KSU ~ G rE$v c$puyiuri p d q u KurahCirifl 7. 9.p r r & r i j s Gopiuri‘, Kai T 6 T U C ~ O ~ O K L ~ ~r iUvUIpSyiivov rLv u6hdv. This criticism of Plato appears to be just. ~ n Gitu’ri @rhd&vos iyxaprjuas i v rf/ &up~urIL?ro~juacGrO;pap$uu robs 7. I I .pLieouc. T h e emendation M ~ U O W(Sadopted by Bekker in his 2nd edition)is unnecessary. The words may also mean to compose a dithy-ramb called the “Fables.”’ Whether fables could be written in ’a dithyrambic form or not, the difficulty which Philoxenus ex-perienced was of another kind : what he found hopeless was the

304 ARISTOTLE'S POLITICS. attempt to compose dithyrambic poetry adapted to the severe Dorian music.7 . 1j. &Xov 671 7OiTOUE +OUE spric is abruptly expressed and possibly something map be omitted. The general meaning is ' that if there be a harmony suited to tile young it must be tested by the three principles of education; the mean, the possible, the becoming.'7.15. JVithout assuming that Aristotle wrote a complete treatise on the subject of education, in which he includes gymnastic, music, drawing, and literature (cp. c. 3. 5 I), it is hard to imagine that, if the work had received from his hands its present form, he nouiil 11,ive broken off in this abrupt manner.

INDEX TO THE KOTES. I. A. Apollodorus, cited, 135. Arcadia, 44 ; village colnmunitiesAbbott, Mr. E., emendation of, 179. in, 5.Abydos, revolution at, 202, 204. Archelaus, King of hlacedonia,Acarnania, village communities in, 218. 5. Archidamus 111, King of Sparta,Accusative, the remote, j z ; of saying of, quoted, 275.measure, 246 :-accusativus pen- Areopagus, the Council of, said by dens, 205. Aristotle (according to Plutarch)Aetolia, village communities in, 5 . to have paid tlie sailors beforeAgathias, Epigram of, quoted, 8. the battle of Salamis, 196.Age for marriage in Plato and Aris- Aretino, Latin translation of, cited,totle, 288. 160, 266, 282.zgj, 301.Agis 11, King of Sparta, 95. Argos, admission of I’erioeci toAlcaeus, quoted (Fr. so),88. citizenship at, 79 ; the c h m g eAlexander Aphrodisiensis, 126 ; of government after the firstquoted (j39-b. IZ), 45. ’ battle of hIantinea, 197 ; tyrannyAlexander the Great, 95, 169. of Pheidon, 215.Alfred the Great, all old English Aristides, ostracism of, 137 ; saidinstitutions popularly attributed to have extended the right of to, 78. voting to the fourth class, afterAmasis, King of Egypt, 38. the battle of Salamis, 196.Amateur, the, and the artist, which Aristophancs, quoted, Knightsis the better j u d g e ? 131. (347), 109 ; (372 and Schol. a dAmbracia, foundation of, 197. loc.), 7 3 ; (?23), 244: CloudsAinphipolis, revolutions at, 193. (1286),33:- I‘hcsmoph.(846), 33.Amyntas the Little (probably Aristotle : begins his a o r k s with a general statement, I ; proceedsAmyntas 11), 217.Anacoluthon, 13, 39, 119, 125, 130, by the historical as \vel1 as by 143, 302. the analytical method, 4 ; his‘Analytics, Posterior,’ quoted (71 a. style praised by Cicero, 251 ; in- I), I. consistent in his use of language, 7, I O ; sometimes states contra-Andreas, tyrant of Sicyon, 229.‘Anima, De,’ quoted (405 b. 8), dictory propositions without re- conciling them, m, 127 ; gave a 294; (412 b. Z j ) , 214. new sense to old words, I I ;Antecedent, the vague, 2,3, 4, 2 5 , often uses pleonastic expressions,32,337 49, 50166, 70, 83, 108, 112, 25, xoj; fond of geographical121, 152, 157, 159, 160, 203, 206, digressions, 90, 271 ; supposed 2 1 1 , 213, 237, 247, 256, 258, 259, the inventions of arts and laws 270; the inexact, common in to have been made many times over, 5 5 , 272 : overmastered by Aristotle, 26.Antithesis, the, of Xo’yoc a n d ?pyov, his own logical distinctions, 107, 184; peculiarities in his use of in Aristotle’s philosophy, 15.Aphytis, 242. quotations, 115, 120, 159; wasApodosis of a sentence, omitted, ignorant of etymology, 123; often 36, 53, 125, 132.T-OL. 11. x

reaches common sense conclu- infers the existence of a superior and inferior in nature from the sions through casuistical dis- cussiox, 124 :-presupposes a analogy of the soul, 38 :-divides material upon which the legis- quantity into continuous and lator works, 9 ; makes psychology discrete, I j :-his feeling to. the basis of politics, 16 ; has no wards Plato one of respect, 60 : idea of a nation in the higher his criticisms of Plato generally sense! 44; thought that there inaccurate, 42, 55, $6, 6j, 156, could not be a permanent di- 265, 290 ; argues (agalnst Plate)vision between rulers and ruled,45 ; recognised the attractiveness that political and doinestic rilleof socialistic schemes, 53 ; as- differ in kind, 2 ; that there can. not be a common idea of virtu?,cribed social evils rather to 39 ; that slaves may be conversetihuman nature than to faulty in- with, 40 ; supposes that crimesstitutions, 53 ; had not so wide will be more frequent in Plato’sa conception of the state as Republic because relationshipjt’lato, jg ; believed that even will be unknown, 49, 51 ; thatthe best state must be limited bycertain conditions, 60 ; his con- incestuous loves would be per- mitted, 49 ; that chastity wouldclusion a s to the identity of thestate, I 12 ; wavers between two be destroyed by communism, g j ; that danger will arise becauseviews of the state. an ideal a n dan ordinary, 113 ; his doctrineof the rulers are always the same,’collective wisdom,’ 129, 130, 131, 5 7 ; that there could be no in-142 ; his succession of states, dividual happiness in Plato’s142 : accepts democracy only as Republic, 58;that the state ofa necessity, 143 : his v i e w re-spcctirig the relation of the good the Laws ’ would be imprac-citizen to the good man, 147; ticable, owing to the number ofunderstood the connexion be- the citizens, 60 ; that it wouldbe impossible to manage the t\wtween the judicial and political households, 63 ; complains thatinstitutions of a country, 182 ; Plato has not defined the positionwcakness of his political philo- of the lower classes, 58 ; that hesophy, 240 :-inconsistent in his has neglected the question ofstatements respecting the origin foreign policy, 6 0 ; that he hasof monarchy, 6, 139, 215 :-en-tertained a prejudice against not provided against over-popu-money, 30 ; was perplcxed be- lation, 62 ; thinks that in thetween its usefulness and its ‘ Laws ’ more space is given touselessness, ib. ; did not oh-serve the advantages of usury, l a w than to the constitution,3 4 ; attempts to make a differ- 59 :-feebleness of his criticismsence in kind between the legiti- on the Spartan constitution, 87 ;mate and illegitimate use of ex-change, 31 :--wishes to discrim- appears to assume that Lycurgtisinate between the artisan and was the author of all the Spartanthe household slave, 14 ; thoughtslavery just, when based on the institutions, j 8 , 81; seems to have supposed that Lycurgusnatural superiority ofthe master, lived after the hlessenian Wars,19, 20 :-attributed sex to plants, 8 1 ; censures the Spartan law-4 ; believed that insects, were 5giver for encouraging ambitionverniiparous, ?j :-recognises acommon principle in organic and and avarice in his citizens,inorganic nature, I j ; supposesthroughout nature that the lower 8 8 ; regards the Spartan legis-exists for the higher, 36, 33 ; lation as pre-Dorian and bor- rowed from Minos, 89:-aagrees with Ephorus in his account of the Cretan constitution, 90 : - superficial in his criticisms on Carthage, 95 :-believed that Solon was the creator of the

Athenian Democracy, 101, 165 ; mark that offices were sold there, classes Pericles among the dem- 99 ; the Carthaginian institutions agogues, IOI :--was impressed by not really like the Spartan, 95; the antiquity and sameness of nature of the Carthaghian mag- Egyptian institutions, 272. istracies, 97.Arrhibaeus, King of the Lynces- Cavalry, the use of, a ~ n o n g the tians, 218.Artapanes, conspiracy of, 220. Greeks, 172.Artifices, political, 171.Artisan, the, and the household Chalcis, war between, and Eretrin, slave, not clearly discriminated by Aristotle, 1 4 ; the contrast 204. drawn by him between them, 40.Artist, the, and the amateur, which Chares, the Athenian general, 203. is the better judge? 131. Charicles, part played by, amongAthens, law at, providing for the ma:ntenance of the children of the Thirty at Athens, 202. citizens who had fallen in battle, Charilaus, King of Sparta, 232. 7 j ; the outburst of intellectual Charondas,thelegislationof1,02: the life after the Persian War, 302 ; the payment of the dicasteries, fragments of his laws in Stobzteus 7 0 ; the democracy (in Aristotle’s and Diodorus, not genuine, 103. opinion) first created by Solon, Chios, revolution at, zoj. IOI ; part played by the sailors Cicero, praises the style of Aristotle, in establishing the democracy, 251 :--quoted, De Off. ( i . 171, 6 ; D e Kep., ti. 34), 124; (ii. zj),63; ‘94. Tusc. Disp. ii. 14), 16.Autophradates, Satrap of Lydia, 69. Cinndon, conspiracy of, ZOG. Cleistlienes, the Athenian, 109, I 36, €3. 2.13.Bekker, 22, 61. 62, 6;,120, 121, 13G, - tyrant of Sicyon, 209. 139, 144, 146, 147, 153, 164,180, Cleopatra, widow of Perdiccas 11, 183, 186, 187, 2 2 2 , 224, 234, 246, 249,253, 254, ’55, 259, ’61, 263, 21s. 269, 278, 280, 286, 298, 299,Bentham, how far justified i n his Codrus, King of Athens, 216. condemnation of Usury Laws, ‘ Coelo, De,’yuoted (29j a. 30), 20. 34.Bernays, IO, 1 5 , 19, 20, 23, z j , 26, Collective wisdom, Aristotle’s doc- trine of, 129, 130, 131, 142. 28, 31, 3 4 39, 43, 51, 54, 56, 60, 69,76, 77,87,89! 93, 95, 108, 1149 Colonization, lias saved England 1x7, 123, 132, 135, 136, I371 138, froni revolution, 99. 1.46, 2 j I .Bojesen, 69. Common meals, the, (at Sparta)Broughton, 264.Burke, quoted, 9, 124, 125, 126, originally a military institution, 276. 88 ; (in Italy) not mentioned byButler, quoted, 26. any ancient writer except Aris-Bywater, Mr., conjecture of, 138. totle, 271. Communistic usages, (ancient), often C. survive among the lower classes,Camerarius, 37, 108. 89.Carthage, superficial character of Communities, religious, frequency Aristotle’s criticisms upon, 9j ; of quarrels among, 54. Inconsistencies in his state- ments, 232 ; meaning of his re- - Village, survival of, in Hellas, 5. Construction, unsymmetrical, 126. Coraes, 37, 70, Z j j, 264, 280. Corruption at Carthage, 99. Cosmi, the, (in Crete), criticisms of Aristotle upon, 91, 93 ; tenure of their office, 93. Cotys, King of the Odrysians in Thrace, 219. Crete, 5j ; why free from slave insur- rections, 79 :-Cretan common tables, The, description of, in Dosiades, 51 :-Cretan institu-x2

308 r N D E x r. tions, .4ristotle’s account of,agrees Diophantus, 70. with that of Ephorus, 90. Dislocations in the Politics, 36.Ctesias. always mentioned by Xris- totle in terms of distrust, 220. Dittographies, the so-called, in theCyclopes, the, 6.Cypselidae, the. duration of their Politics, 132. power, 230. Dosiades, quoted, 89, 91.Cypselus, said (in the Oeconomics) Doxander, of Mitylene, not men- to have taken the whole wealth tioned in Thucydides, 195. of his subjects by taxation, 225. Draco. proverbial for the seierityCyrene, 243.Cyrus, Aristotle’s account of, dif- of his legislation, 104. ferent from that of Herodotus, Ln. 221. Ecphantides, 302. Egypt, effect produced by the an- D. tlquity and sameness of, on the Greek mind, 272.Daphnaeus, of Syracuse, 199. Election, double, futility of, 66.Darius, son of Xerxes, 220. Elis, election ofthe Senate at, 203.Dative of the instrument, IO, 136, English constitution, the, the209; of the manner, 1 6 7 ; of growth of accident, 64.reference, 281 :-after T ~ Ya h j v , Epaminondas, united the ArcadianI j 8 ; after G&iv, 237 ; after villages to form the city of Mega-C;rfprf;wcl, 2 3 s . lopolis, 5 , 44 ; his invasion ofDelphi. revolution at, 19j. Sparta, 80.Delphian Knife. 4. Ephoralty, the: the institution of,Democracy, on!y accepted by Aris- attributed by Aristotle both tototle as a necessity, 143 ; is not Lycurgus and to Theopompus,( A SXristotle supposed) free from i s , 224 :-Ephors, the ; modethe danger of dissension, 187. of their election unknown, 85.I)cinosthcnes, quoted, (383.4),131; Ephorus, agrees with Xristotle in1489. 201, 8j ; relates (460) that his account of the Cretan consti-the city repaid money borroived tution, 90: states that Zaleucusby the Thirty, I 10. fixed by law the penalties forDcrdns, prince of Elimeia, 217. crimes, IO?.Dialogueq suppressed, instances of, Epidaninus, revolution at, ISj.in the Politics, 127, 141. Epitadeus, said to have been theDiodorus Siculus, ignorant of Italian author of the law at Spartageography, 190. alloxina the alienation of pro-Diogenes Laertius,. q.uoted, (,v . I ., perty, c 2 , 83. 4 -1 I, 73 . Eretria, war between. and Chalcis,Dion? 221, 222, 2 2 3 ; said by Plu- 204.tarcli to have been made a Spar- Ethics, the Eudemian, quoted (ii.tan citizen, 81. 411. 21, 278 ; (vii. 9. 9: 4): 37 :-Dionysius the Elder, stories of the the Sicomachean, quoted (i. I. 41 ) ,escessive tasation imposed by $I), I ; (6. 4 60; 16. $ Z ) , 1 8 4; (6. 46; (7.him on his subjects, 225; de- 107, IO), 5 21), 158 ; (8. 5 z), 252 :-(ii. 3.scription of his character by Cor- 5 0IO), 2 2 9 ; ( 5 . I4), 114; (6.nelius Kepos, 228; duration ofhis power, 231. 141, 2 85 ; (7. & 2, 3, 8, 111, 2 ; (ib. 8 $ 9 ) , 3 :-Dionysius the Younger, 209, 222, 1 ) , 165 ; (ib.223 ; description of his character (iii. 5. S; 17), 39:-(v. 5 . $11, 4 44 j ; (ib. I I ) , 29 ; (ib. 171,in the Aristotelian ‘Polities,’ 2 2 8 ; 5duration of his power, 231. 170; (8(.6.5 I4 8), 11 ; (7. §,4!, ), 5Dionysius (of Halicarnassus), inen- I04 ; (8. $ I 17 :-(vi. .44 5, 114; ), 114; ( IO.t1ons the great reputation of Theo- 21,dectes as a rhetorician, 21. 1 1 8 ; (13. $ I), I O ; (ib. $ 81,

138 :-(vii. 6. $ 7). IO ; (7. 6 6), Helinea, the. at Epidnmnus. 186. 5 I .641,4 13,02 00;; S 81, Hellas, 51 ; vil!age communities in,21 ; (13. (14.254:-(viii. (9. $ $ 1-3), 5 : a federation of, why impos-20; (,IO. 4 z ) , 216; (ib. $ jl, 38, sible, 264.8 3 ; (!b., % 6 ) ,6 3 ; (11. 5 7J9 2 ; Hendiadys, 2 5 .4(12. 9 7), 7 ; (16.0 31, ’47, :--(Is. Heraclea (in l’ontus), 263 : revolu-C. 8), 53 :-(~.69.2),279; (Ib. 8), tionsnt. 1 9 6 : - ( ? i n Trachisi, 204.1 2 5 ; 5(8. 711 2 5 4 ; (9- 4 I3)r 7 , Heraclcides, one of the assassins294 ;. (Ib. 141, 293. of Cutys, 219.Ethiopians, I j4. Heracleides l’ontictis, 232, 242.Eubulus, tyrant of Atarneus, 69. Hermne, the inuti1:ition of the, 77.Euripides; story of his having Hermeas. the fricnd of Aristotlc. 69.Decamnichus scourged, 219 :- Herodotus, asserts that Tis:imenesquotations showing a sophistic and Hegi:is n-crc the nnly fnr-or humanistic feeling, 12 ; cited, eigners to \ ~ h n mrights of citizen-(Aeol. fr. 16), 115 ; (Andr. 595i, ship at Sparta were grantcti, 8 2 ;8 0 ; (Bacch. 3801, 296 ; (Suppl. is fond of geographical digres-23S), 168: hledea, scho!ia on sions. 90 ; censureti by Aristotlc in thc Hiatoria Ani:naIiiim, 221 : (1. 613), 165.Europe, extent of, according to --quntetl, li. 191I , 111 : (ih. 1961,Aristotle’s conception, 364. 6 7 ; (i:. I ~ z ) , ,3 8 ; (iii. 741, 4 3 ;Evagoras, tyrant of Salamis in (IV. ~ b o i ,4 s ; ( v . 491,138 ; ivi.Cyprus, 218. 571, 8;; (vii. 16): 4 3 ; (ib. j0), 77 : (IS.21, 265 ; ob. 1221, 264.Exchange, Aristotle’s two kinds of, Hesychius, 4, 274.31. Heyne, C. ti., 271. F. Hiern, tyrant of Syracuse, 230.Fallacy, the, of uI1uBwis and &ai- Hierocles (the philosophcr), quoted,prtrls, 46. 127.‘ G. Hildenbrand, 2j9. Hipparinus, the father of Dion, 203.Generatione Animalium, De,’ Hippodamus of hliletus, 67, 70-quoted (732, b. IO), 25 ; (743, b. 74 ; pnssessed great Icgislativc241,. 53. ingenuity, 7 j ; not rcally the firstGenitive, the partitive, 120, 122, proposer of the latv that the150, 186, 2 5 2 ; the epesegetic, children of citizens slain in battle1 2 6 ; of respect, 245 ; of value, should be brought u p at the192 ; after +wu, 160. public expense, 75 :-the I’rag-Giphanius, 230. ments of, not genuine, 69 ; trans-Goethe, quoted, IO, 129. lated, 71-73.Goods, the threefold division Of, ‘Historia Anlmalium,’ quoted :489, not peculiar to Aristotle, 252. b. 81, 33.Gorgias of Leontini, 39, 108. Homer, quoted (11. xiii. 359), 18 ;Gottling, 4, 26, 201, 230, 271, 2 8 7 , (Od)ssey, ii. 3651, 51 ; ( I l y m n 298,301. to Apolio, z~o),264 :- quotationsGreeks, the, limited the divine by from, not found in our ‘Text, 138, 296. the human, 7. Humanistic or Sophistic feeling inGrote, 67,82, 84, 101, 109,190, 229. Greek Poetry, 12. H. Hybrias the Cretan, the Scolium of,Hallam, 228. 79. Hyperbolus, ostracism of, 137.Hanno, conspiracy of, 2 4 .Harmodius and Aristogeiton, con- I. Inconsistencies in the Poiitics, 63, spiracy of, 217.Hehdome (the battle of), meaning of the word, 191.

78, 90, 957 101,166,169,224- 2 3 2 , Livy, quoted (xsxiii. 461,98. 256, 260. Locri, (in Italy), seized by Diony-Inscription found in Crete, 214.Inventions, the, of arts and laws, sius the younger, 209. supposed by Plato and Aristotle Logic, Aristotle greatly influenced to have been made many times over, 55, 272. by, 107, 184.Iphiades, 204. Lucian, quoted (Pro Lapsu interIsocrates, the teacher of Theo- dectes, 21 ; quoted (Panath. Salut. 3 7), 226. 276), 293. Lycophron, I 26.Italy, 270. Lycurgus. 67, 77, 78, 81, 82, 87 ; J. (according to Aristotle and Eph- orus,) copied the legislation ofJason of Pherae, sayings ascribed Minos, 89,90 ; supposed by Aris- to, 115. totle to have gone to Crete beforeTudicial and uolitical institutions. he gave laws to Sparta, 88 : said connexion between, I 8I . (by Ephorus) to have been con- temporary with Homer, 102 ;Justin, 206 ; quoted (xix. z ) , 98. Aristotle's statement that he be- longed to the middle class, 168. n. Lygdamis, tyrant of Naxos, 201. Lysander, 88; conspiracy of, 185,Knife, T h e Delphian, 4.Knights, the, in the Athenian con- 206. stitution, 102. hlachiarelli, quoted, 2 2 7 , 229. hlagistracies, the, of 5,100, and 104 L. af Carthage, 97.Lacedaeinon ; unwillingness of the hlagistrates, the, of LacedzLemon Iaxdaemonians to conform to circumstances, 64 ; the rapid de- and Carthage, how distinguished, cline in their numbers, 83, 8 4 ; 107. theirimmorality, 89; their avarice, 'Magna Moralia,' quoted (1179 b. 88 ; said by ancient writers to 391, 10. h a w been without education, 293; hlalthus, quoted, 62, 286. had an element of communism in Manin, Daniel, a saying of, quoted, their customs, $2, 5 5 ; all their 69. institutions popularly ascribed to Mantinea, the first battle of, 197 ; Lycurgus, 78 ; (according to the second, 82, 275, 283 ; repre- Herodotus) rarely conferred citi- sentative government at, 239 ; zenship on foreigners, 83; the why said to have been under a double kingship, 87 ; the quarrels democracy, 240. of the kings, ib.; the common hlanuscripts of the Politics, cited, meals originally a military insti- tution, 88.-Laconia, village communities in, 5.Lambinus, 236, 246, 249, 268, 272, 274.Lassalle, 40.Latin Version. the old. see \Yilliam of Moerbeke.Laveleye, E., quoted, 26.Law, importance of unwritten, in ancient times, 145.Leonides of Tarentum, epigram of, quoted, 109.Leuctra, battle of. 63, 275, 283.

Merit, importance of opening a 1’. career to, I I 9.RIetaphysics, quoted, (980 a. 2 2 ) . I ; Parrhon, one of the assassins of(991 a. 221, 56 ; ( 9 9 j a . 31, 7 6 ; Cotvs, 219.(1oo4a. 51, 1 1 5 ; (102ob.3i,183; Part~iknii,siory of the, 205.(1038a. 351, 141 ; (1072 b. 261, ‘Partibus Animalium, De,’ quoted‘ 254; (1074,b. I ) , 2 6 0 ; (ib. 61,jj. (687 a. zr), 13. illeteorologica,’quoted (346 a. IO), Paul, Emperor of Russia, saying 43. attributed to, 226.hIethod, both the historical and the Pausanias, called by Aristotle‘King,’ analytical, employed by Aristotle, -1t6hje. assassin of Philip, 21s. 4. Peisistratus, acquisition of the ty-Rlidas, the story of, 30. ranny by, 199 ; said to h a w beenillill, quoted, Z j , 28. 66, 100, 2 1 2 . summoned before the Areop:qyis,hlinos, the laws of, 89. 229 :-Ptisistratidie, thc,durationIlithridates, 221. of their power, 230.hlnason, the Phocian, said byTimaeus to have been a friend Pentlielidae, the, of XIitylenr, 219. Penthilus, 219. of Aristotle, 196.hIoerbeke, IVilliam of, see \Villiam Pcriander of Corinth a n d I’eriandcr of Xloerbeke. -ooffAAmmbrbarcaicai,a I 97. t i o n of, assassinaMonarchy, Aristotle’s different , theories respecting the origin of, 217. 6, 139, 215 :-the ‘barbarian ;’ Aristotle’s account of, inconsis- Pericles, improvements made by, at Athens IKC. 4341, 7 3 ; c!:issed tent, 166.Money, Aristotle’s account of, 30. by Aristotle among the tlema-hliiller, O., quoted, 62, 166, 245. gogues, 101.Muretus, 61.- Perioeci, the, (of Crete) meaning ofRlusonius, fragment of, quoted, 269.Myron, tyrant of Sicyon, 229. the term, 79; why said by Aris- totle to hnvc retained the laws of Minos, 89. Perizonius, 120. . Phalaecus, son of Onomarchus, the h- Phocinn leader, 94.Nature, can design be attributcd Phalaris, tyrant of Agrigcntum, t o ? 26. 215.Nicocles, (according to Diodorus) the name of the eunuch Mho Phaleas of Chalcedon, 67. Pheidon the Corinthian, 62. assassinated Evagoras, 216. - King or tyrant of Argos, 62, 215. Philemon, quotations from, 12. 0. Philip, King of Macedonia, 217. Philosenus, 303.Oaths of hostility, taken by states, Photius, 102. Phreattys, the court of, 180.214, Phrynichus, part played by, amongOenophyta, battle of, 189. the Four Hundred, 202.Oligarchies, the, of Greece worse Piraeus, why more democratic than than the democracies, 171. Athens, 194 ; laid out by Hippo-Oncken, 12, 92. damus, 73.Oreus, the later name of Hestiaea, Plants, sex attributed to, by Plato 192. and Aristotle, 4.Organization, importance of, 297. Plato, attributed sex to plants, 4 ;Orthagoras, tyrant of Sicyon, 229. made psychology the basis ofOstracism, 136. politics, 16 ; thought that theOvid, 30, division between ruler and ruledOxylus, the law of, 242.

should be permanent, 45 ; aimed Pclitical discoveries, danger of re- warding, 77. (in the Republic) at an almost Politics, The, written not earlier impossible strictness in the re- than 336 B.C., 218, 2 2 2 : probably lation of the sexes, 53 ; supposed unfinished, 260,304; dislocaiions, the inventions of arts a n d laws 36 ; unfulfilled promises, 41,,63, 66, 93, 181, 272, 303; genuine- to have been made many times ness or spuriousness of 11, c. I ? , over, 5 5 ; did not consider the 103; the references to other works question of slavery, 5 9 ; had a wider conception ofthe state than of Aristotle, possibly interpola- Aristotle, 59 :-the Kepublic in- tions, 45 ; passages remarkable adequately summarised by Aris- for smoothness and regularity, j 4 ; repetitions, 226 ; inconsistencles, totle, ib. :-criticised by Aristotle, 63, 78, 90, 95, 101,~ 166, 169, 2, 39, 40, 473 48, 50, 51, 54, 56, 224,232,j~6,260; variations inthe 57, 58, 59, 60, 64, 65.. 1039 15% use of language, 2 2 3 ; casuistry. 265, 270, ‘90, ism Aristotle) :- 124 ; suppressed dialogue, 127; quoted, Alcibiades I, 131E,j o :- the supposed dittographies, 132: Gorgias, j r j . 516, I O I :-Hip- references to discussions not pias (The Lesser), 368A, 73:- found in the present test, I j I ; Laws i. 634 D, 78 : ii. 6j7, 272 : iii. 677 foll., 55 ; 680, 6 ; 691, 87 ; erroneous additions of numbers, 692, 8;: iv. 712, 64: v. 731E, 230 ; unsymmetrical divisions, 53;738C,261; 747D,264:vi.767 332 ; irregularities in the order of discussion of subjects, 188 ; cha- A, 105 : ib. C, 7 4 ; 776 C, 7 8 ; 7 j 7 , racter of Book VI, 234, 247; 41 ; 778 I), 275 ; 780, 80 : VIII. general innccuracy of style, 244 ; 8 4 5 4 5 3 : xii. 951, 162 :--hIeno, passages omitted or altered by 73,39 ; 9 j E, 50 :-Phaedo, 63 D, those who change the order of the 243 :-Phaedrus, 250 D, 18 :- books. ib. ; opening chapters of Politicus,z59A, 131 : ib.C,z ; 263 Book VII, 2j1. D , 26 ; 27s I),I j ; 301 E, IzZ :-- ‘Polities,’ The, quoted, (1559 b. 2S), Republic, i. 349, 350. 28; ii. 370 c, 88; (1568 a. I I ) , 271 ; (ib. b. 19), 78 ; 371 B,29 : 374.45 ; 3 7 j E , 228. 265 ; 378,291 : iv, 423 A, 47 ; ib. E. 214 ; 435 E, 264 : v, 463E, Polybius, quoted, (vi. 45), 88, 9;; 47; 469B.21: vi.495AtB,11: viii. 544 D, roo; 548 E, 299; (ib. 561, 99. 556D, 214: s. 601 D, E, 118; Polycrates, tyrant of Samos, 2 2 5 . 607 C, 138:-Sophist, 2 2 2 C, Postgate, 287. ~6:-Sy1nposium, 191D, 1 6 j;193 Prior and posterior, 7, 9, 107. A, 44 :-Theaetetus, I j4 A, 77 ; Promises, unfulfilled, in the Politics, 174 A, 37 ; 182 A, I I :---Tiniaeus, 41, 63: 66, 933 181, 2723 303. 19 33, 5 j ; 24 C, ?64. Proverblorum Centuna, quoted, 4.Pleonastic espressions and repe- Pseudo-Deniosthenes, quoted (1460, titions, zj, roj, 138, 160,163,211, 235, 238, 253. 266, 278. 261, 36.Plot, the Popish, 77. Psychology, made the basis ofPlutarch, quoted (Agesilaus, 31), 82; (Agis, 5),83;(Cleomenes,Ioi, 168; politics by Aristotle and Plato, 16. (?io, 71, E4 ; (Lycurgus, 3), 169; Pythagorean brotherhoods, 54. (ib. 26), 86; (Solon, 20), 167 : (Apophth. Lac.215 D), 118 ; (ib. Pythagoreans, the, used the term dvrrmriovdbs in an ethical sense,4$. 219 A), 275.Poetics, The, quoted (1448 a. 5 ) , Q. 301; (1451 a. 3), 2 6 1 ; (1454 b. Quantity, divided into continuous IO), 170. and discrete by Aristotle, I 5. Quotations, Aristotle’s use of, 1I 5 ,Political and judicial institutions, connesion between, 181. 120,I j9:-fromHomer, not found in our test, 139, 296.

I LV D E S I . 3’3 R. Sirra, 219. Slave, the household. how distin-References, the, in the Politics to guished by Aristotle from theother works of Aristotle, possibly artisan, 14, 40. Slavery, opinion ofAristotle respec-insertions, 45 :-to discussions ting, 19 : condemned by soine of the Grcck poets, 11 : not suf-not found in the present work, ficiently discussed by Plato, 59 :--Slavery in Crete, 79. 151. Smith, Adam, 28. Socialism, fnllncies of, 1 2 s .Reorganization, effects of, on a Socrates, 2, j9, 45. 49, 50, 56 :state, 244. spoken of as though he w r c thcRevolutions, arise from a combin- chief speaker in the ‘ Lam.’ 3s.ation of great political causes, Solon, 77,78 ; the law of, litnitin: ;IC-and small personal reasons, 194. quisition of land.6S :- lorl)itldingRhetoric, The, quoted, (1355 b. 4), neutrality in a sedition, 167 ; bc- I O ; (1359 b. 31), 36; (1360 a. 231, lieved by Aristotlc t o 11:ivc foun- 2 1 2 : (1361 a. IO), 80; (1365 b. 19), ded thc lltheninn Ilcmocracy, 101, 169 ; supposctl by Aristotle 51 ; (1368 b. 7), 14s; (1371b. 18), to have belonged to the middle 5 3 ; (1373a.261,116; (1376, b. IO), 126; (1378 a. 6), 212; (1379b. z), class, 168 :--quoted, ifr. 4 ) , IO? ; ( 5 1 , 169; ( z j i , 291.265; (1397 b.31),217; (1399a.71, Sophistic or huinanistic feeling in2 1 ; (1400 b. 2 1 ) , 104; (1402 b. 261, Greek Poetry, 12.13; (1408 b. zo), 109; (1414 b. ?E), ‘Sophistici Elenchi,’ quoted, (174 b. 298; (1419 a * 311, 84.Rhodes, said by Strabo to have 3;), 126 ; (177 a. 3 3 ) ! 47. Sophoclcs, quoted, iAj. 6jo), 284 ;been built by Hippodamus ofMiletus, 73 ; revolutions in, 189, ( p e d . Tyr. 1286), 78. Sosicrate‘, quoted, 79, 90.108. Soul, the analogy of the, uscd byRiege, 118. Aristotle to show the existenceRoman Law, allowed a verdict of of a superior and inferior through-‘non liquet,’ 7j. out nature, 38. Sparta, see Lacedaemon.Royalty, the different theories of Spengel, 9, 184, 268.Aristot!e respecting the origin of, Stallr, 1 5 , 93, 136, 277. - 1 State, the ; Arlstotle’s answer to6, 139, 215. t!ie question, \Vhat makes the identity of the state? 1 x 2 ; he S. hesitates between two concep-Samos, works of Polycrates at, 225 ; tions of the state, a n ideal and Sainian colonists at Zancle, 192. an ordinary, I 13. States, succession of, in AristotleSardanapalus, 220. and Plato, 142 ;Austin’s classifi-Scaliger, 70. cation of, I js.Schlosser, 4, 80, I j I , 169, 2 j3. Stephen, Sir J. F., quoted, 9.Schmidt, 264. St. Hilaire, 232.Schneider, 56, 69, 120, 144, 228, Stobaeus, quoted (xlv. 304), 103. Strabo,,denies that the Spartan in- 240, 263, 280. stitutions were derived fromSchomann, 101. Crete, 90 :-quoted, (vi. 260), 102 ;Scylax, 281.Sentences, irreguIar,q ;condensed, (x. 482), 102. Suidas, 2 1 , IO?. 241.Serf, the, contrasted with the ar- Susemihl, 15, 43, 93, 118, 148,150, tisan by Socialist writers, 40. 1.59, 164, 174, 176, 207, 210, 2 2 2 ,Service, domestic, 40.Seuthes, the Thracian, 221.Sex, attributed to plants by Plato a n d Aristotle, 4.Shakspere, quoted, (hZ. of V. i, 3), 74; (R. 11, iii. 4), 136.Sicyon,’ the tyrants Of,-ZZ9.Simos, 204.

246,2j6, ~ j i )2,80, 284,287,290, Thurii, foundation of, 74 : revoiu.293: 301. tions at, 192, 207.Sybaris, foundation and destruction Thurot, 164.of, 192. Timoleon, 204.Sylhur::. 230. Tiniophanes, the brother of Timo-Syracuse,revolutionsat, 190,193:- leon, 204.Aristotle's statements respecting Topics, quoted, ( I o j b. 30), 133.the constitutional changes at, Troezenians, oracle given to the,after the defeat of the Sicilian ex- 287.pedition, not in accord with Tyrtaeus, quoted, (fr. 3), 224.Ihucydides, 197 :-the 'timewhen the Syracusans were well u.governed,' 222. Vnited States, the, double election of the senate in, 66. T. Usury, why condemned by Aris- totle, 30 ;-Usury Laws, how f'trTacitus, quoted (Ann. i. 3), 127 ; justified, 34. (ib. si.z4), 209. v.Tarentum 5 2 , 245 ; changes of government at, 190:-defeatofthe Victorius, 159, 177, 224. 295. Village, the, a colony of the family, Tnrentines by the Iapygians, 190.Teichmiiller, 2j p . 5, 6. Village Communities, 44 ; survitalTelecles, the hlilesian. 173.Thnles, the philosopher, 37 :-(pro- of, in Hellas, j. Vitruvius, quoted, 273, 276. 1i;hIy) the Cretan poet, 102.Thc:ijienes, of Alegara, 199.Thcbnn history, Xristotie imper-fectly acquainted with, ~ 0 4 . 1%'.Thcniistocles, ostracism of, 137. U'allace, %I., quoted (LRussia'),5 . 1l~illiamof AIoerbeke, 5 , 8, 1 3 , 26,Theodectes, 21.Tlieodorus, the actor. 291.Tlieognis, qunted. ( 5 3 5 ) , 18 ; ( I O ~ I ) , 29, 42, 52, 76, 96, 124, 159, 164. 167, 180, 204, 224, 235, 257, 254,265 ; a line cited (2271, which is 257, 266, 2711 293, 2941 295, 299, also found in Solon, 27. 301.Theophrastus, quoted, (Hist. Plant. A. i. 2. 4 3), 39. Xenophanes, quoted, 155.Theopompus, King of Sparta, 78, Xeno hon quoted, (Cyropaedia, vi;. 224. 5 . (73),'18 ; (Hellen. i. 6. $ I q i , 21 ; (vi. 5 . 5 z8), 81 ; (Hiero, c. 9.Thibron, 283. 4 j ) ,211 ;iMemorab. i. 2.9 9),45 ;Thomas Aquinas. 276. (iii.4. 9 2 ; (ib. 6. 3 IO),Thrasybulus, brother of Hiero, 222. . I2 )4, 141 ;Thras)-ti;ieus, the Eunuch who as- (Oec.,c 41,273 ; (Resp. Lac. 9. sassinated Evagoras. 218. c. 6. 9 s I, 3 , 41, 53.Thucydides, quoted for the exist- Xerxes, 220. ence of village cominunities in ancient Hellas, j ; his use of theantithesis of ho'yos a n d ;pynv, 15 ;his account of the Lesbian Warnot inconsistent with that of Zaleucus, affirmed by Ephorus to have fixed by law the penalties ofAristotle, 195 :-quoted, (i. IS), crimes, 102 : a saying of, quoted,2 3 1 ; (ib. 771, 106 ; (ib. I ~ I )8, 4 ;(ib. 137), 66 ; (ii. zo), 272 ; (ib. 103 ; the fragments of his laws371, I 4 5 ; (ib. 39), 283 ; (ib. 401, in Stobaeus and Diodorus not130, 167 ; (ib. 451, 118: (ib. 601, genuine, ib.2 1 2 : (iii.37), 76, 163. Zeller, 169.

I R D E X T O THE KOTES. 11 6 4167. pouhl,, meaning of the word in Cretc, 9'. $ouhopni, ,!?o6Xrmi (used imperson- ally), 17, 37 ; ( 4 d i $ t h i s @o6hrrni o tp;v r o i r r ) rroiriv T O ~ ~ I ~ K L S ,pivrob Bhrzrui, i. 6 , 0 8), 21. r. ynp.LLK<, 11. ydp, implying a n objection which is not emressed. 108. .gcopy;w,'peculiar uses of, 76. yr'yvopni (yr'vsudni, (?)genuine, iv. 415, IS), 179 ; (&UT€ fipo;W9 8 i x O V &i Knl ycvopivoir oi?sCov, K . T . ~ . ,i. 8, j I ! ) , 25 ; ( p i ycvhpruov 6' dpoiwr, 1x7. 15, Z I ) , 180. y X n $ ~ p i s 189. A. 8; = 'certainly,' 37. 6r/~lo\"pyri', rot;.

viii. 2 , $ z ) , 294. c'knopiwv iconj. Schmidt : 1ISS. TI;.pK . T . ~ . , iv. 14. 111, 174.Gtop0i;o iuiu 6 i B r i Gio,,Ooiv T@' + # I L i T n h v 6 p v , vi. 4, $ 9j, 241.SiXos (Biii m'l a l pcm3oXoi yiyuourai GiXGs, \.. I , $ S), 184.Bio,'3chin, 70.4Bp$n Cconj. Campbell: 315.5. o\"pap, 1. 11, I Z ) , 37.Glunpis, meaning of the term inAristotle, 77. E.i y y p n + i (&, rrportPcp;uov Knrh rhs iyypn$ik, vi. 8, 5 81,248.?Ouos, use of the word in Xristotle, 44 :--iBuq, for 'barbarians,' 6, 52.sZ rc ( d rc Gca+;pou ;K roI;rwu, K.T.A., 5ii. 1 1 , 4i, 96.&os, (iv. 4, p n),1 5 8 ; pleonastic, vii. 6, '$ si, 264. iniXfipi'o, probably pleonastic, (ii. j, P 171, 56.

13, $ 4). 275, 2 7 7 . KpiucLv, with genitive, 160. K , I L T ) ~ S= the advocate or approver of a dgctrine, 294. K T V T L K ~ ,divisions of, 35. 4KT;[W (KTiuiIuTfs ,ybpuu, V. IO, 8), 216. K o h & l U (found in seine XSS., iii. 13, $ IS), 136.i r p m t l n , 268. . .division, 221.Irrsdc (the 'Knights';, the Athenian him (. Bti&ccu t u XicuBnl ra; TW' constitution); 102. i p u dsoplav, iii. 1 1 , S I), 129.i ~ d ~(ct o)dd~. omn., ii. I, $ 2 ) , 42. K.ct&purs, 298, 303.ani = and indeed,' 47 : - ~ dv;u, 56, 222 :-(pouapX[ai mi rupauui&s, V. 10, § 371, 223.KClKlJ?ThTplS, 139.

TOUS, vii. 9, $ 7), 269. Trsprxohiov (coni. Broughton : hISS. s 121, 76. . .r , i b s rbu S o u , 4 rh ,., p 4OTOV, in an explanatory sense, 23, 56. ne4Xiynp,yici, used in peculiar senses, viii. 2, $ 21, 294. 4(,\i. I . 3 6 ; 2 , 71,2 3 j . ~ 3 6 . ?rctcrvois, read In the margin of one ;\IS.for nfrrois (i. 2 , 6 :o), 8.

rTCTTdS ((iTf 77fp .\"[U[ &U &unfp ;Vnfrrois, i. 2, $ IO), 8.lfss., 4rdhis (xa'r rrdhtwu, vii. 6, 9),264.noXiTcia, employed in a peculiar (?)sense (iii. 3, 7), 113 :-for 'theconstitutional government,' 123,164 :-for ' a n y good form ofgovernment,' 152, Z I I :-for themembers of the governing body,202 :-for the title of the ' lie-public,' and for ' Plato's State'generally, 42, I 57, I73 :-nuhirtiaa n d n o h h u p a , 122, 160, 186 :-[&4rais rrohdrfiais, iv. 7, I ) , 162 ; (;uiv.Tfi iTOhlTf;$l TOG TqhfKh;OUS, 14,9 +), 173; ( T ~ ZS hhns mXiTfias, vi, 4, 9 IS), 243; (ib. vii. 4, $ I!, zjg.5noh;rcirpn, 122, 160 ; ( T ~ WE'U T$ w d i - TfbpflTl, V. I , 1 1 ) ) 186.IFOhtTlKdS ( E l 6 f i Tf)U 7T6hLY [{U p ; O U T O ~ L T L K ~ iVi., 6, 7),60 ; (TfJhlTlKfh 5(rjUfT(L1f&v, vii. 6, 7), 263; (nnhr- 6r1KoT;pa F'y;VfTo ;Xiyap,& V. 6, 4 2), 2 0 2 .R O ~ ~ T L K ~1) 0S8?.souqpoKpariw (BoKfi 6' tluar T G U d6u-U&UU TZ, p i tbuopciuBal TI). ;plum-5K ~ U T O U ~ ; W J U d h i u , iihhli nouqpo-KpaToIlpiUqV, i V . 8, 51, 164.Irpayparria (2,yfi 62 n u ' dhhriu B i a ~ o g - 515,iv.T l K G U T/Jfly,UflTf;UU, 4)3 175.9npi& m p i ~ h nsp u f a i r TLUK U T ~ ~ L - 3KfLU8CUTUIY [&J,y;j]j V i . 8, 8 ) , 248.~ p =d'taking precedence of,' 13, 23.xphp, taken with hi by Bernays,

3 20 Z N D E X ZZ. END OF VOL. 11.



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